2009/SOM2/SCSC/WKSP3/007 The Development of Toy Safety Regulation in Indonesia Submitted by: National Standardization Agency of Indonesia (BSN) APEC Regulator Dialogue on Toy Safety Singapore 1-2 August 2009
THE DEVELOPMENT OF TOY SAFETY REGULATION IN INDONESIA Rista A. Dianameci National Standardization Agency of Indonesia (BSN) 1 Outline A glance of BSN Indonesian National Standard (SNI) related to toy products Toy safety issues in Indonesia What we have done Current condition Challenges 2
A glance of BSN Legal entity Presidential Decree No. 13 Year 1997 Government regulation No. 102 Year 2000 Main function to stipulate Indonesian National Standard (SNI) As of June 2009 6871 SNI 200 SNI mandatory (related to agriculture, fisheries, food energy and mineral resources, transportation, manufacturing product) 327 SNI have been applied voluntarily through certification SNI No. 12-6527-1-2001 12-6527-2-2001 12-6527-3-2001 12-6527-4-2001 SNI related to toy products Title Toy safety Part 1: Specification of physical and mechanical characteristics Toy safety Part 2: Specification related to flammability characteristics Toy safety Part 3: Specification for transformation of certain elements Toy safety Part 4: Specification for equipments of chemical experiment and related activities Scope To define specification of physical and mechanical characteristics of toys To establish testing method for flammability characteristics of toys To establish quality requirements and testing method for transformation of antimonies, arsenic, cadmium, black tin, mercury and selenium from toy material and its part exclude parts that can not be touched To establish specification for equipments of chemical experiment and related activities Requirements ~ Cleanliness ~ Toxicology Test method ~ Toy materials other than clay and hand painting ~ model from clay and hand painting ~ chemicals shall be labeled ~ quality of chemicals shall be approriate to the experiment ~ medium ~ test tube and test tube clamp ~ eyes protection
Background 122 companies, Production capacity : 42.46 million dozen (2008) Export value: US$ 188,561 million (2008) Import value: US$ 122,16 million (2008) World toy market US$ 42,6 billion, Indonesia 0,3 % of world needs Relatively high domestic market opportunities Availability of raw materials Availability of labour Toy Safety Issues in Indonesia Flooded by toy products from certain country that containing hazardous material i.e. lead Toys market : 85% illegal, 15% legal Labeling issue Safety issue No regulation on toys (based on SNI) Existing regulation concerning educative toys (for elementary school, pre-school, and school for special needs) containing qualitative requirements and its use is limited in Ministry of Education Demand from institution that are represented consumer to have SNI related toys to be applied mandatory
What we have done 2008 study on integrityof SNI Conducted in Jakarta Method of study: survey, product testing, analysis of testing result, workshop 5 samples Limited testing Result: 5 samples of toy products have met 100 % of heavy metals requirement and 80 % have met the requirements of physical and mechanical characteristics What we have done 2009 continue to study on integrity of SNI Method of study: survey, product testing, analysis of testing result, workshop Conducted in Palembang, Banjarmasin, Jakarta, Bogor, Tangerang Bekasi, Semarang, Surabaya,Yogyakarta dan Denpasar, Jayapura, Manado and Makassar Tested for 3 SNI plastic base and wood base toys 46 samples Waiting for testing result
Current Condition There are 4 accredited testing laboratories PT Sucofindo Laboratorium Cibitung PT Intertek Utama Services PT Mattel Indonesia QA Laboratory Balai pengujian mutu barang ekspor impor Testing for physical and mechanical characteristics (based on EN 71,ASTM 963) Chemical contain (based on ASTM 963, 1645-94,CFR 16, Consumer product safety and consumer product commission CPSC, BSEN 1122,1811, 12472) testing for physical and mechanical characteristics (based on EN 71) testing for heavy metals (based on EN 71) Chemical contain (heavy metals) based on EN 71-1-2001; ASTM F 963-2003 There are no product certification bodies for toys Expensive testing cost Challenges A variety of toy industry Involvement of various technical institution Harmonization of SNI with international standard Readiness of conformity assessment infrastructure i.e. certification body and testing laboratory Readiness of toy industries to implement SNI especially for small/home industries
Thank you Further information contact us: sps@bsn.or.id